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- Gods_eye abstract "A God's eye is a yarn weaving and a spiritual object. The Ojo de Dios (Eye of God in Spanish) is woven with yarn and wood, often with several colors. The weaving of an Ojo de Dios is an ancient contemplative and spiritual practice for many indigenous peoples in the Americas, and beliefs surrounding them vary with location and history. Some people believe they were originally part of the sophisticated religion of the Ancient Pueblo Peoples.In many of the Pueblos of New Mexico (U.S.) Ojos de Dios have traditionally been created for celebration or blessing, presented as a gift or designed to bless a home. Often they reflect a confidence in all-seeing Providence. The spiritual eye has the power to see and understand things unknown to the physical eye. During Spanish colonial times in New Mexico, from the 1500s to the 1800s, Ojos de Dios were placed where people worked, or where they walked along a trail (Mager, 2012). Traditional Ojos de Dios are frequently woven in solitude, as part of an extended meditation or prayer. In other settings, their construction is one aspect of longstanding communal engagement and connection. For centuries, young people in the mountains of New Mexico have made Ojos de Dios in learning circles (wisdom circles) with their elders. In other parts of the 'New World' they were used as ritual objects or for rites of passage. Today, artisans weave complicated or variegated versions of the traditional Ojo de Dios, selling them as decorations or religious objects. There has also been a huge increase in the use of Ojos de Dios as an easy and fun craft for children, but with the meditative and collaborative aspects removed. The Ojo de Dios or God's eye is a ritual tool, magical object, and cultural symbol evoking the weaving motif and its spiritual associations for the Huichol and Tepehuan Indians of western Mexico. The God's Eye is symbolic of the power of seeing and understanding that which is unknown and unknowable, The Mystery. The four points represent the elemental processes: earth, fire, air, and water. The Huichol call their God's eyes Sikuli, which means "the power to see and understand things unknown." When a child is born, the central eye is woven by the father, then one eye is added for every year of the child's life until the child reaches the age of five. Original Tepehuan Crosses are extremely rare to come by. There are many that are being made for the tourist market, but they do not carry the same traditional and spiritual significance.".
- Gods_eye thumbnail Ojo_de_dios_anaroza.jpg?width=300.
- Gods_eye wikiPageExternalLink studymandalas.
- Gods_eye wikiPageExternalLink Nierika.pdf.
- Gods_eye wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Gods_eye wikiPageExternalLink kidsapr.html.
- Gods_eye wikiPageExternalLink eye_of_god.html.
- Gods_eye wikiPageExternalLink abt_huit.htm.
- Gods_eye wikiPageExternalLink ojo-de-dios_-mandala.html.
- Gods_eye wikiPageExternalLink item112023store.html.
- Gods_eye wikiPageExternalLink hchtribe.htm.
- Gods_eye wikiPageID "8990332".
- Gods_eye wikiPageLength "12908".
- Gods_eye wikiPageOutDegree "30".
- Gods_eye wikiPageRevisionID "677832513".
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Air.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Ancestor.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Ancestral_Puebloans.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Pueblo_Peoples.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Atmosphere_of_Earth.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Beeswax.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Category:1960s_fads_and_trends.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Category:Art_in_New_Mexico.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Category:Arts_in_Mexico.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Category:Huichol.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Category:Indigenous_culture_of_Aridoamerica.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Category:Indigenous_textile_art_of_the_Americas.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jalisco.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Category:Religious_objects.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Classical_element.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Classical_elements.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Cognoscenti.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Earth.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Expert.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Fire.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Gods_eye.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Huichol_people.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Learning_circle.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Mexico.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Namkha.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink New_Mexico.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Nierika.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Ojo_de_Dios.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Peyote.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Puebloan_peoples.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Pueblos.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Ramon_Mara_Torres.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Tepehuan.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Tepehuán_people.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Votive.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Votive_offering.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink Water.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLink File:Ojo_de_dios_anaroza.jpg.
- Gods_eye wikiPageWikiLinkText "God's eye".
- Gods_eye hasPhotoCollection Gods_eye.
- Gods_eye wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Fact.
- Gods_eye wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Gods_eye wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Gods_eye subject Category:1960s_fads_and_trends.
- Gods_eye subject Category:Art_in_New_Mexico.
- Gods_eye subject Category:Arts_in_Mexico.
- Gods_eye subject Category:Huichol.
- Gods_eye subject Category:Indigenous_culture_of_Aridoamerica.
- Gods_eye subject Category:Indigenous_textile_art_of_the_Americas.
- Gods_eye subject Category:Jalisco.
- Gods_eye subject Category:Religious_objects.
- Gods_eye hypernym Yarn.
- Gods_eye type Company.
- Gods_eye comment "A God's eye is a yarn weaving and a spiritual object. The Ojo de Dios (Eye of God in Spanish) is woven with yarn and wood, often with several colors. The weaving of an Ojo de Dios is an ancient contemplative and spiritual practice for many indigenous peoples in the Americas, and beliefs surrounding them vary with location and history.".
- Gods_eye label "God's eye".
- Gods_eye sameAs m.027sk6t.
- Gods_eye sameAs Q16242212.
- Gods_eye sameAs Q16242212.
- Gods_eye wasDerivedFrom Gods_eyeoldid=677832513.
- Gods_eye depiction Ojo_de_dios_anaroza.jpg.
- Gods_eye isPrimaryTopicOf Gods_eye.